My wife was cooking on our GE Profile electronic induction cooktop model PHP900SM1SS. She was using 3 or 4 of the burners and needed a place to set down a pot lid. She set it down over the touch controls. All of the lights on the cooktop immediately began flashing. I removed the lid and touched one of the controls to stop the lights from flashing. Not sure if the steam from the bottom of the lid or the lid touching multiple controls at the same time caused the problem. Now the only light on is the control lock and the cooktop is not functional. Tried touching the control lock for 5 seconds as described in the owner's manual but that didn't solve the problem. Also turned off circuit breaker hoping that I could "reset" the cooktop. Checked the voltage supplied and I have two 120 volt wires and the neutral wire properly connected

I took the cook top apart and I think the problem is with the touch pad (circuit board) but the part is $300. I would rather have a manual so that I can really troubleshoot instead of guessing or have someone confirm that the problem is the touch pad. Can't find anything wrong with the touch pad (no smoked componenets on the circuit board) and the wires leading to the other components from the touch pad circuit board are thin low voltage wires so I don't think that enough voltage could have gone through them to damage anything else.

Anyway, I am looking for some sort of confirmation to my diagnosis before I spend $300. I can't belief the GE wouldn't put a warning in the owner's manual that placing metal objects on the touch pad can cause severe damage. The only warning regarding the controls is that metal objects can cause inadvertant activation but it doesn't mention damage.

Thanks for the suggestion. Found the tech sheet. Wasn't expecting anything but the basic wiring diagram (like in the old days). To my surprise the tech sheet included instructions on how to access/read error codes, the probable cause and corrective action. Guess I will be replacing the touch board. That was an expensive lesson ($300). Wish GE had been more forthcoming in providing an adequate warning in the owner's manual.